MarketingManagement.pdf

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The Consumer Buying Decision Process 99


Figure 3-3 makes it clear that a company must strategize to get its brand into the
prospect’s awareness set, consideration set, and choice set. The company must also
identify the other brands in the consumer’s choice set so that it can plan competitive
appeals. In addition, the company should identify the consumer’s information sources
and evaluate their relative importance so it can prepare a range of effective communi-
cations for the target market.


Stage 3: Evaluation of Alternatives
Once the consumer has conducted an information search, how does he or she process
competitive brand information and make a final judgment? There are several evalua-
tion processes; the most current models view the process as being cognitively oriented,
meaning that consumers form judgments largely on a conscious and rational basis.
Some basic concepts underlie consumer evaluation processes. As noted earlier,
the consumer is trying to satisfy a need.In seeking certain benefitsfrom the product
solution, the consumer sees each product as a bundle of attributeswith varying abilities
of delivering the benefits to satisfy this need. However, the attributes of interest to buy-
ers vary by product. For example, the attributes sought in a camera might be picture
sharpness, camera size, and price. In addition, consumers vary as to which product
attributes they see as most relevant and the importance they attach to each attribute.
Knowing that consumers pay the most attention to attributes that deliver the benefits
they seek, many successful marketers segment their markets according to the attrib-
utes that are salient to different consumer groups.
In the course of evaluating alternatives, the consumer develops a set of brand beliefs
about where each brand stands on each attribute. The set of beliefs about a particular
brand, which make up the brand image,will vary with the consumer’s experiences as fil-
tered by the effects of selective perception, selective distortion, and selective retention.
Ultimately, consumers develop attitudes toward various brand alternatives
through an attribute evaluation procedure.^28 Suppose, for example, that Linda Brown
has narrowed her choice set to four computers (A, B, C, D) on the basis of four attri-
butes: memory capacity, graphics capability, size and weight, and price. If one computer


Figure 3-3 Successive Sets Involved in Consumer Decision Making

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